Published Aug. 23, 2001 at 12:00AM / Updated February 13, 2016 at 06:24PM

Red Cross pulling out of Baker

5023724

David Cowan checks contents of a Red Cross first aid kit that is used when personnel and equipment are dispatched for emergencies. (Baker City Herald photograph by S. John Collins). - baker city herald

true

David Cowan checks contents of a Red Cross first aid kit that is used when personnel and equipment are dispatched for emergencies. (Baker City Herald photograph by S. John Collins).5023724

Unless it can make up a $30,000 budget shortfall in the coming weeks, the Eastern Oregon chapter of the American Red Cross will close its offices in Baker and Union counties Sept. 30.

The Red Cross, a Congressionally chartered organization that provides a multitude of crisis services and training opportunities, has served Baker County since the days of the First World War.

Robert Joy, field service manager for the states 15 Red Cross chapters, met with the local chapters 11-member board and three employees Wednesday to look for ways to keep the chapter afloat. The local chapter has received financial aid from the national office the past four years since reorganizing to serve just Baker and Union counties.

We talked strategy, and the tremendous effort these people have made to make the need real to people, Joy said. Weve got to tell the Red Cross story.

Thats a task that board co-chair Allen Chapin of Richland tackles with zeal.

During the Second World War, Chapin was a pilot in the 8th Air Force. Shot down while flying a mission over Europe, he spent two years in a German prisoner of war camp, where the Red Cross met both his nutritional and medical needs.

The Red Cross kept me and a lot of other people alive over there, and thats something the Germans wouldnt have done, he said.

Never forgetting the kindness shown him as a young pilot, Chapin put 13,000 miles on his car the first year he chaired the emergency services committee, receiving training all over the state.

Thats the kind of dedication common among the chapters 200 volunteers, Joy said.

We have volunteers who turn out at 2 a.m. to provide food, clothing and shelter for families who have been burned out of their homes, he said. Our volunteers also teach lifesaving skills to families, workers in the wilderness, professional rescuers, lifeguards and babysitters. They give of their time and money to make a daily difference in their community.

Giving to non-profit organizations is generally off as the economy has taken a downward turn, Joy said, but another factor is also in play. The local chapter has gradually increased the scope of its services over the past four years under executive director Beverly Higley. While fundraisers and donations have made up about 25 percent of the projected shortfall, the local chapter cannot continue to rely on support from the national office, he said.

That support has echoed the Red Cross tradition of mutual support and the concept of a hand up rather than a handout, Joy said. But at the end of the day, the people we help, and the helping community, have to support themselves. Overhead is cut to the bone: the chapter operates from donated office space provided by the YMCA in Baker City and Eastern Oregon University in La Grande. Courses are taught from donated classrooms. Volunteers have installed long distance service over the Internet to save on phone bills. Training equipment and relief supplies are often provided through grants and donations from local businesses and foundations. The financial crisis is very real.

If the local chapter is forced to close its doors, some Red Cross services would continue, including major disaster relief, Joy said, but opening disaster shelters and aiding the victims of housefires would present a major challenge since the closest chapters are in Pendleton and Boise.

How much time does it take for the Red Cross to turn out when youre in your nightclothes watching your house burn down? he asked.

What will certainly have to be scaled back or even eliminated, Higley said, is the many levels of training the Red Cross offers, including first aid, lifeguard, babysitting, and wilderness and rescue classes offered to everyone from emergency medical technicians to teen-agers to employees of the U.S. Forest Service.

Those training classes will have to be accessed through travel or through another provider, she said.

Baker County emergency services director Mark Bennett said he was surprised to hear of the possible closing.

They have an agreement with the county to be responsible for shelter operations, and they do an excellent job, he said. They provide a lot of services that are unheralded, including a Red Cross program that provides a warm shelter for motorists stuck in the area because of a winter storm.

Should they close, Id have to scramble to organize replacement programs and equipment right in the middle of fire season, Bennett added. Wed have to come up with some alternatives.

Higley said that the chapter could remain open, but only with an immediate and then on-going commitment from some of the areas 41,000 residents. Tax-deductible contributions can be sent to the Eastern Oregon Red Cross, PO Box 1024, Baker City, OR 97814. The telephone number is 523-2231.

Joy called the chapters financial plight a story looking for a happy ending.

The story is not about supporting a building or an agency, he said. Its about supporting over two hundred volunteers who provide emergency services and preparedness in our community every day.